Tag: Bristol

On Tuesday we took advantage of a break in the weather to sail from Potters Cove to Bristol. Bristol has a rather large anchorage that is quite exposed to the prevailing southwest winds, but with the forecast calling for light winds from the north for several days it seemed like a good time to visit.

The sun peeked out a bit on our pleasant four nm sail east across the bay.

We were feeling lazy so we went under headsail alone, beam reaching and broad reaching with winds ranging from 6-12 knots. We had plenty of room to drop the hook and before we knew it we were settled in again.

The view from Pegu Club in Bristol harbor.

Bristol is a cute town of about 22,000 people, and it has the oldest continuously celebrated Independence Day festivities in the United States. The celebration starts on Flag Day on June 14th where they have outdoor concerts, soap box derby races, and many other festivities. A former co-worker had told me about their July 4th parade which he said was unbelievable. Continue reading “Relaxing in Bristol, RI.”→

If there was any way that we could take Pegu Club cruising with us, we absolutely would. We love her. She’s solid, dry as a bone, we like how she sails, and she’s very forgiving of our mistakes. She’s built to sail anywhere we want to go. But at 24′ feet and with only 15 gallons of water (not to mention insufficient headroom for Jeff), we knew she just wouldn’t work long-term, so for the past year or so we’ve been heavily researching what we want in the next boat – the one we want to sail away on.

The sheer number of boats out there is almost overwhelming, and everyone has an opinion on everything. Just for the keels there are full keel, modified full, fin keel, wing keel, bulb keel, or centerboards. There’s shallow draft, deep draft, spade rudders, skeg rudders. There are cutter rigs, sloop rigs, ketch rigs, etc. How do you prefer the hull-to-deck joint to be attached? Bolted? Screws? Bolts and screws? How beamy do you want it? How long? What about headroom? Are you going offshore or simply coastal cruising? Of course the big one: what’s the budget?

We started by making lists of boats that are typically considered to be good off-shore boats (some needing a few more modifications to make it so than others). Then we set our minimum requirements – headroom, beam, draft, construction – and started winnowing the list down. Our first go-around we were way too restrictive and ended up with very few possibilities. So we reevaluated and started all over again. It’s no exaggeration to say that we spent hundreds of hours researching. Continue reading “Researching the next boat”→